Walter Kaegi

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Walter Emil Kaegi (November 8, 1937, [1] New Albany, Indiana - February 24, 2022) [2] was a historian and scholar of Byzantine history, professor of history at the University of Chicago, and a Voting Member of The Oriental Institute. He received his B.A. from Haverford College in 1959 and his PhD from Harvard University in 1965. He was known for his researches on the period from the 4th through 11th centuries with a special interest in the advance of Islam, interactions with religion and thought, and military subjects. Kaegi is also distinguished for analyzing the Late Roman period in European and Mediterranean context, and has written extensively on Roman, Vandal, Byzantine and Muslim occupation of North Africa. [3] He was known also as the co-founder of the Byzantine Studies Conference and the editor of the journal Byzantinische Forschungen .

Contents

Bibliography

1970s-1980s

1990s

2000s

Research

Kaegi was most recently involved in several projects, notably on Muslim raids into Byzantine Anatolia. He was planning an investigation of the role of Byzantine concepts of strategy in the emergence of concepts of strategy in early Modern Europe. Kaegi's research interests also included Byzantine commercial relationships with the Arabian Peninsula on the eve of the Islamic conquests. Additionally, he was preparing an essay on Byzantium in the 7th century for an Oxford University Press handbook to Maximus the Confessor. An avid reader of Arnold J. Toynbee in his formative years, [4] Kaegi was writing a reassessment of Toynbee as a Byzantine historian.

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References

  1. "Walter Kaegi, Byzantine historian named a Kentucky colonel, is dead at 84". Hyde Park Herald .
  2. "Walter Kaegi, noted scholar of Byzantine and Roman Empires, 1937-2022 | University of Chicago News".
  3. Kaegi, Walter (2010). Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge: University of Cambridge. ISBN   9780521196772.
  4. Li, Hansong; Goodyear, Michael; Otradovec, Kevin (2016). "Maturation of a Historian: Conversation with Walter Kaegi". Chicago Journal of History (6): 5.